Fire extend unbeaten streak to nine games

TORONTO (STATS) - A milestone goal from Chris Rolfe and an
insurance score from teammate Brian McBride helped the Chicago
Fire remain the last unbeaten team in MLS on Saturday.

The 2-0 win over Toronto FC (3-3-4) at BMO Field was also the
first victory for Chicago (3-0-6) after five straight ties. The
Fire are three shy of the longest unbeaten run to start an MLS
season - the Los Angeles Galaxy went undefeated in their first
12 games of 1996 - the league's inaugural campaign.

Rolfe's game-winner in the 59th minute was his 32nd goal in a
Fire uniform, moving him into second place all-time behind Ante
Razov (76).

"I had no idea about (the record) so I guess I will have to say
scoring the winner was more important," Rolfe said.

The goal did carry a bit of controversy, as the play began when
official Ricardo Salazar waved off an appeal for a handball in
the Fire penalty area. The play continued up the field to Rolfe,
who took a pass from Cuauhtemac Blanco before avoiding a
charging Stefan Frei to knock the ball into an empty net.

"Did the referee give the penalty? No. Then it is not a
penalty," said Toronto interim coach Chris Cummins, whose club
lost for the first time in five league games since he took over.

Fire coach Denis Hamlett had brought in Rolfe to replace a
struggling Patrick Nyarko in the second half.

"It was a game where Patrick not having best day, and today
Rolfey got the call and he went in and did well," Hamlett said.
"At halftime I said we are still at zero and whoever scored
first was probably going to hang on."

Rolfe's goal seemed to wake up a sleepy Toronto offense, which
pressed Chicago for an equalizer before McBride thwarted the
rally attempt from six yards out with his sixth goal of the
year.

"You don't want to miss those ones," McBride said. "After so
many draws it started to get frustrating, but we have a strong
group of guys here."

The gray skies on the shores of Lake Ontario served as a
metaphor for the play in a sluggish first half. Chicago did not
register a shot on goal until the end of it, when Wilman Conde
headed a corner kick delivery just high.

The win moved the Fire two points ahead of FC Toronto in the
Eastern Conference standings.

"I think it is a huge turning point, especially to start off
with a win in a stretch of three road games." Hamlett said. "If
we continue to play like we did today we know we can get better
because our offense is talented and we just need to be committed
in defending."